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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Movie: "Fight Club" & Book: "Chesapeake"

A forum to either submit your own review of a book, video or audio interview, or to post reviews by others.

Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby pillowhead » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 17:06:44

[/quote]I've just got to say though, these various kinds of leaders arise quite naturally.[/quote]

I would have to disagree with that as well. Those who make it to the upper echelons of the hierarchy are not there so they can just express their desire however they feel like (even if they are insane) and the decisions they make are limited and must serve certain interests. (We know this from the Milgram experiment and the Stanford prison experiment). They have goals and a path that they cannot deviate from; otherwise they wouldn't be where they are. If the population gets too difficult to control they hire one half to kill off the other (one reason why WWI happened). Energy is directed at a target that has no meaning, like Jews, or building the Pyramids in order to unify and keep the social order from destroying itself.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 17:29:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pillowhead', '[')Those who make it to the upper echelons of the hierarchy are not there so they can just express their desire however they feel like
Well, there are all kinds of variations on the power at the top, sure. A Dictator has to worry about plots. King Croessus thought he was the happiest mortal, until the Persian Monarch (hey, I left that one out!) boiled him or something like that. I should get out my copy of The Golden Bough. I seem to recall triskaidekaphobia coming as a result of sacrificial Kings being killed in the 13th month. The point is, these things have always been around one way or another. 'sall I'm sayin.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby pillowhead » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 17:51:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')The point is, these things have always been around one way or another. 'sall I'm sayin.


And it is a convenient belief because it helps to justify our current way of Being-in-the-world.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 22:34:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pillowhead', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')The point is, these things have always been around one way or another. 'sall I'm sayin.


And it is a convenient belief because it helps to justify our current way of Being-in-the-world.
Let's parse this. "convenient belief" Now what I've been getting at is that humans have always selected individuals to represent the collective in one way or another and this has been going on since Paleolithic times. Obviously it's been around all through recorded history. The Romans even tried to set up a Triumvirate to avoid what was for them inevitable it seems: Emperor (There's another one I forgot!) The word convenient means suitable or favorable to one's interests. It even has a new meaning, not listed in my American Heritage Dictionary, which was used so effectively by Dana Carvey in his old Saturday Night Live Church Lady skits: a cheap rationalization, used disparagingly with sarcasm. It also shades into something like a transparent excuse. "Belief" here, as you use it, seems to mean "unwarranted conception" or "unenlightened superstition". I can look at your word "justify" and see the same pattern at work: 'justify" = "make an excuse for". I can appreciate the effort to be visionary and see a way of Being-In-The-World that has no leaders. But since there have always been leaders, it seems to be part of the way humans organize themselves. It is "human nature". Even Tyler Durden, the Nihilist Destroyer of Everything Phony, was called "Sir" and followed as the leader of his cult.

So pillowhead, try and be more concrete. Explain to us your bold vision where the arrangements of millenia, the way the world is and has always been is fantastically transformed. Can you do that or are you just projecting some ill-thought-out resentment of authority? I'm anticipating your word.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 23:33:59

Back to the other half: Michener's novel Chesapeake. It's about Virginia and Maryland from the late 16th Century to the 1970s. I'm up to the early 18th Century now. This writer is known for his historical sweep and I think he does it very well. He presents the various threads of people and shows how the world looked to them. You see the Puritan point of view and the Quaker point of view. You see things as the various Indian tribes saw them and the early Virginia settlers. There was a Quaker woman who forced her husband to get rid of his slaves and we read how he did so very reluctantly; then the sold slaves are carried off by pirates and sold in Haiti to die within a year. From his point of view, and those of his fellow Virginians who had so often started out as indentured servants, it was all perfectly natural. The poor Englishmen and women who came to America were sold to buyers at the dock to the highest bidder to work for seven years. This was how the owners of the vessels recouped their expenses and turned a profit. So these people started out as legally bound property, and when their years of servitude were over they were quite accustomed to think in these ways. Then, when the Africans were also brought and sold, it was merely an extension of this way of doing things. What they did not see, evidently, was the long term implications of permanent servants whose children and whose children's children would be legally bound as their grandparents were. I'm looking forward to see how Michener treats this as I'm only at around 1700 thus far. Great reading.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby TWilliam » Sun 25 Feb 2007, 23:41:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'E')xplain to us your bold vision where the arrangements of millenia, the way the world is and has always been is fantastically transformed.


I have a couple comments on this if I may PMS. Or rather, a quote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Anthony Robbins', 'T')he past does not equal the future.

plus comment.

I agree with your observations about human social structures throughout humanity's less than illustrious past. However, there is a great deal of research out there that indicates that not only individual, but cultural consciousness does in fact evolve (I'm not going to get into details; read Ken Wilber's stuff if you're interested, he catalogs a lot of it), so there does exist the possibility of an emergent genuinely anarchistic society. Anarchistic in the true sense of the word, meaning a society of self-governing individuals, without the need for external leadership.
"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 00:30:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TWilliam', 't')here does exist the possibility of an emergent genuinely anarchistic society. Anarchistic in the true sense of the word, meaning a society of self-governing individuals, without the need for external leadership.
Perhaps that's true. I don't see much more now though than a trend of people wanting this to come about. There doesn't seem to be any evidence that it would ever happen in reality. Probably because of tensions between individuals and the collective. Here's what I mean by that: The ego, the individual, has it's own interests. The collective has different interests not necessarily aligned to those of the ego. But the collective can't "think for itself." So individuals, in one capacity or another, have input into this collective, to it's direction and decision making. Hence: Politics - the art of influence. Every permutation of this imaginable has probably already been tried somewhere at someplace at sometime or another. But it always involves the same idea: individuals practicing some form of politics to gain influence according to various channels and traditions regulating how this is done. Those who gain such influence over the collective life are leaders. It seems to me that an anarchistic society is an oxymoron in this sense that since the collective can't think for itself, someone is always required to provide the needed direction. It may be diversified and power/influence is widely distributed (as it is in modern liberal democracies) but these various disparate decision-making centers are still ground for the same political realities that have always existed.

This is my argument, TWilliam. What do you think an anarchistic society would look like? How would decisions get made? How would the self-directed individuals coordinate to make these decisions without some form of delegated authority? Oh, and another question about your remark regarding the "less-than-illustrious" human past: do you look around you and see signs that we truly are about to evolve to a higher way? The past was messed up and the future is worse the way I see it, primarily because of Peak Oil.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby TWilliam » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 19:15:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'P')erhaps that's true. I don't see much more now though than a trend of people wanting this to come about. There doesn't seem to be any evidence that it would ever happen in reality. Probably because of tensions between individuals and the collective. Here's what I mean by that: The ego, the individual, has it's own interests. The collective has different interests not necessarily aligned to those of the ego. But the collective can't "think for itself." So individuals, in one capacity or another, have input into this collective, to it's direction and decision making. Hence: Politics - the art of influence. Every permutation of this imaginable has probably already been tried somewhere at someplace at sometime or another. But it always involves the same idea: individuals practicing some form of politics to gain influence according to various channels and traditions regulating how this is done. Those who gain such influence over the collective life are leaders. It seems to me that an anarchistic society is an oxymoron in this sense that since the collective can't think for itself, someone is always required to provide the needed direction. It may be diversified and power/influence is widely distributed (as it is in modern liberal democracies) but these various disparate decision-making centers are still ground for the same political realities that have always existed.

This is my argument, TWilliam. What do you think an anarchistic society would look like? How would decisions get made? How would the self-directed individuals coordinate to make these decisions without some form of delegated authority? Oh, and another question about your remark regarding the "less-than-illustrious" human past: do you look around you and see signs that we truly are about to evolve to a higher way? The past was messed up and the future is worse the way I see it, primarily because of Peak Oil.


Oh I agree, there certainly doesn't appear to be much evidence to support the idea, not when one looks around at the present state of affairs anyway. But one of the salient characteristics of an emergent phenomenon is that nothing that precedes it gives any indication of it's nature, just like you can't take a pile of parts and deduce the function of the machine without assembling them and actually watching it work (assuming of course, a complete lack of knowledge about machinery. I personally can look at a pile of automotive engine parts and deduce the operation of the whole, but that's because of prior experience).

This is why we really can't say much about how a genuinely "new" paradigm will look. My personal opinion is that while there are a lot of people speculating about it, and at least some of them may have better guesses than others, I don't believe anyone truly knows what it will look like (assuming it occurs), precisely because it's something that has yet to be experienced by humankind.

I do, however, believe that at least one aspect of it would be that external governance through law would no longer be necessary, because we would be truly self-regulating (in short, genuinely mature). What a society of such individuals would look like, I don't think we can even imagine...
"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby pillowhead » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 19:23:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'h')umans have always selected individuals to represent the collective in one way or another


To "represent" the collective would be just a symbolic position, like winning the Golden Globe. Good use of language to obfuscate the issue. I find it hard to believe that domination could be that easy. Mere "representation" is enough.

A hierarchy based on division of labor and enforced with brute force did not always exist. It requires a surplus of energy stored in a centralized location which first appeared with the granary and the agricultural revolution. If you want a hierarchy maintained by force/propaganda, for any relevant length of time, you need surplus energy (doesn't matter how big of an alpha male you are).

Another bit of obfuscation is your attempt to focus on qualities of individuals, as if this is relevant. I'm not concerned here with disputes between individuals. Furthermore, the behavior of the individual is conditioned by the environment. If you pack enough rats into a cage they will lash out on each other in fury. Does this mean "Rat Nature" is evil? Or that there even is such a thing as "Rat Nature." Where, on the timeline of evolution does one isolate the precise point when a rat species begins and its predecessor ends?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')Explain to us your bold vision where the arrangements of millenia, the way the world is and has always been is fantastically transformed. Can you do that or are you just projecting some ill-thought-out resentment of authority?


The world has only existed for millenia? You must be a Christian. In that case, you must belive in the Garden of Eden? Who was the king/tyrant/whatever then? God? Are you sure you're not just projecting an infantile insecurity towards some ill-though-out father figure?

I have no bold vision for the future, only a bleak view of the present. A transformation is surely inevitable (nothing lasts forever), but it will not depend on the effort of a single individual. And it is getting incresingly unlikely that any of us will make it to the other side of this transformation.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 21:47:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TWilliam', '
')Oh I agree, there certainly doesn't appear to be much evidence to support the idea, not when one looks around at the present state of affairs anyway. But one of the salient characteristics of an emergent phenomenon is that nothing that precedes it gives any indication of it's nature
I don't really think we'll get very far speculating about an emergent phenomenon that hasn't yet emerged and of which we know nothing! :roll:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'i')n short, genuinely mature [individuals] - What a society of such individuals would look like, I don't think we can even imagine...
I know I can't! Here's what I think has been going on: people are more and more atomized, more and more cogs in a machine and less than ever self-sufficient. That's what's made us rich, plus oil. Take away the fuel and these cogs all become useless, non-functional. Some indigenous members of tribes in the remnant Amazon will be in a better position in a decade or two if we don't manage a transition to post-carbon life.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 21:58:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pillowhead', '
')


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')Explain to us your bold vision where the arrangements of millennia, the way the world is and has always been is fantastically transformed. Can you do that or are you just projecting some ill-thought-out resentment of authority?


The world has only existed for millennia? You must be a Christian. In that case, you must belive in the Garden of Eden? Who was the king/tyrant/whatever then? God? Are you sure you're not just projecting an infantile insecurity towards some ill-though-out father figure?
why did I guess this was coming? Just so you know, pillow, millennia is plural. I could be talking about 6 of them or 6 million of them. "Ill-thought-out father figure"? He wasn't ill-thought-out. He used to take me horse back riding. He was a good dad, I have no complaints.
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby pillowhead » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 22:34:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'w')hy did I guess this was coming?


You asked for it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')millennia is plural.


How long have you been alive? Weeks? Many, many, many, many weeks?
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Re: Fight Club & James Michener

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 26 Feb 2007, 22:48:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pillowhead', '
')How long have you been alive? Weeks? Many, many, many, many weeks?
many, many, many, many weeks. You got a sense of humor kid?
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